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Canada

Canadian authorities are warning people to stop eating laundry detergent pods, a strange and dangerous online trend that has resulted in more than 40 hospitalizations in North America.

In a statement issued Thursday, Health Canada warned teens and others from intentionally biting the pods, while a P.E.I. police force tried to make the same point with humour.

An officer with Kensington police posted a video on the force’s Facebook page describing the dangers of the so-called Tide pod challenge.

In the seven-minute video, Const. Robb Hartlen reminds people that a banana and Timbit are safe to eat, but that a Tide pod or Timbit package are not.

“Seriously, do we really need to tell people what they can and can’t eat?” Hartlen said.

The unlikely stunt has become an online phenomenon: People filming themselves biting into the colourful pod, and then becoming ill.

Swallowing even a small amount of the highly concentrated detergent can cause diarrhea and vomiting. Both YouTube and Facebook have been working to take down the videos.

According to an alert issued this week by the American Association of Poison Control Centers, the centres have received over 50,000 calls relating to liquid laundry packet exposures in the last five years.

“While unintentional misuse by children five and under accounted for the majority of these calls, a recent trend among teenagers ingesting the packets — and uploading videos to various Internet platforms including video-sharing websites, social media and vlogging platforms — has caused significant concern among poison control centers,” the alert reads.

Check out our press release regarding #laundry packets here: https://t.co/cR12CNOTne
Memes have referred to it as "forbidden fruit". Remember Adam and Eve suffered serious consequences. You can too.
Call 1-800-222-1222 or text POISON to 797979 to save the number in your phone.

“Health Canada is aware and concerned about social media accounts showing young people biting, eating or pretending to eat liquid laundry detergent packets. We remind Canadians that ingesting these packets can cause serious illness or death. Detergent products should never be put in anyone’s mouth,” it wrote in an email to The Canadian Press.

Proctor and Gamble, which manufactures Tide, has also issued warnings.

“What should Tide PODs be used for? DOING LAUNDRY. Nothing else. Eating a Tide POD is a BAD IDEA,” the company wrote on its website.

It enlisted Rob Gronkowski of the New England Patriots football team to be part of a social media video where he repeatedly says “no, no, no” to eating the detergent packs.

“Use Tide Pods for washing, not eating,” Gronkowski said in the video.

Sitting in his P.E.I. police cruiser, Const. Hartlen said people tempted to do the pod challenge should instead bring back other, healthier online trends like the ALS ice-bucket challenge.

He said if someone sees a person about to eat a pod, they should “feel free to give them an orange” instead.